is it possible..

is it possible to stay at a weight for years by only eating healthy and not exercising? my best friend is 290 pounds (i'm 140) and she eats everything I do in a day with the exception of a few things here and there. I eat around 1800 calories a day.. she might get to 2000 once in a GREAT while, but for the most part, stays around what I eat. She hasn't went up or down in the past 3 years. The difference is I go to the gym and she doesn't. I am trying to prove to her that if she just exercises, she doesnt even need to change the way she eats, she will lose the weight. she doesnt believe me.

Replies

  • zaph0d
    zaph0d Posts: 1,172 Member
    energy balance.

    calories in - calories out
  • LittleMissDover
    LittleMissDover Posts: 820 Member
    Yes because she'll be burning more than she is now.
  • pastryari
    pastryari Posts: 8,646 Member
    How do you know that she eats like you every single day?
  • I would say it is absolutely possible. I had been the same weight (within 5 pounds either direction) for over 15 years. I am just beginning an exercise routine, and I have not changed my food intake dramatically since starting MFP. I think I am actually eating more now than I used to eat. I am fairly certain it is the increased physical activity that is leading to my weight loss.
  • You are correct. It's simple physics: when more calories are burned than consumed, you will lose weight. A 3500 calorie per week deficit (burning 500 calories a day more than you consume) will result in losing 1 pound per week. A 7000 calorie per week deficit, two pounds per week. At a diet averaging 1800 calories per day, your friend is probably coasting on her basal metabolic rate and whatever daily activities she normally pursues. If she were to work out a couple of times or more per week, she would up her calories expended and lose weight without changing her diet.
  • How do you know that she eats like you every single day?

    we live together.. we cook together. go to school together.. we are with each other all the time. i guess there are times she isnt around me, but its pretty rare. so unless she binge eats when i sleep, or when she is in the bathroom... i know what she eats. she asked me a few years ago to help her lose weight (she started at 315) because she thought she was eating wrong, so its become our way of life, i guess you could say.
  • Well if she's maintaining at what she's eating now and she creates a deficit through exercise then yes weight loss is possible - cals in vs cals out.

    But how do you know how much she really eats? A girl over 200lbs maintaining at 2000 calories seems highly unlikely, unless she has some kind of medical problem.

    Edit: If you really want accuracy on the amount she eats, I suggest she try counting her cals one day.
  • You are correct. It's simple physics: when more calories are burned than consumed, you will lose weight. A 3500 calorie per week deficit (burning 500 calories a day more than you consume) will result in losing 1 pound per week. A 7000 calorie per week deficit, two pounds per week. At a diet averaging 1800 calories per day, your friend is probably coasting on her basal metabolic rate and whatever daily activities she normally pursues. If she were to work out a couple of times or more per week, she would up her calories expended and lose weight without changing her diet.

    This is what I was searching for! Thank you!
  • smantha32
    smantha32 Posts: 6,990 Member
    Sure, I can eat a lot more when I exercise.
  • _happycats_
    _happycats_ Posts: 105 Member
    Exercise certainly isn't going to hurt :) It'll create more of a calorie deficit if she continues to eat the same.
  • CynthiaElise
    CynthiaElise Posts: 262 Member
    It's 80% what you put in your mouth...